Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Schupack,
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this is a 14-year-old with diabetes insipidus,
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vomiting, and headaches.
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We've got many sequences here to share with you,
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but we're going to focus on the Sagittal T1.
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The sagittal T2 fast spine echo.
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And then obviously,
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there's contrast enhancement of this abnormality in
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the suprasellar and intrasellar territory, which makes
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that snowman-type phenomenon. And bear in mind,
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this is a pediatric case.
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It is a male, it's a man.
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So what's our differential diagnosis here?
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Right, so the sellar is not enlarged,
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so this is primarily a suprasellar
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mass enhancing in a child.
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So there is a substantial differential which could
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include things like germinoma, sarcoid, eosinophilic
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granuloma,
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things of that sort that affect the stalk and are
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in that differential of diabetes insipidus,
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which this child does present with now.
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I would say from the surgical standpoint,
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nobody's going to like that idea very much.
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Nobody wants to dig into anyone's hypothalamus.
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So we're going to really go to lengths to try
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to make a diagnosis, including CSF studies,
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and just really correlating all the other things that
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we can in terms of age and whether there are other
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findings elsewhere in the brain that would help us.
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So I think that's kind of our differential.
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Lymphoma, maybe, but given the age,
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I would say Germinoma is going to be up there.
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And I think the person that read it favored Germinoma
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and Eosinophilic granuloma. Had it been an adult,
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you might include things like neurosarcoid,
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although that can occur in any age range.
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Metastasis to the suprasellar region,
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especially breast and lung, by far, are big.
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And then when you have stalk involvement,
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there are some really weird things,
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like pituocytoma and not so weird things.
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Lymphoid hypophysitis,
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but that's more of an inflammatory infiltrative
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immune-mediated process.
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So this is a mass as opposed to a non-mass
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like enlargement of the stalk region.
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And in my simplistic mind,
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I think what you were saying is big,
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suprasellar lesion, young, otherwise healthy person.
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It's a juicy suprasellar,
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but it's not really a suprasellar mass.
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Right. Almost everything we're seeing is up here,
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and maybe it's infiltrating down below, maybe not,
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but it's not producing a heck of a lot of expansion.
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So germinoma is something to strongly consider here,
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and diabetes insipidus is particularly prevalent in
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patients that have germinoma and
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stalk-related disease. Now,
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I guess hamartoma,
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the enhancement kind of rules that out.
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Yeah, hamartoma is out.
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You like those to be more in the
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region of the tuber scenario.
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The epicenter should be a little further back,
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closer to the mammillary body.
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I think the epicenter is over here.
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Hamartomas don't enhance.
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They're usually associated with.
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Elastic seizures or behavioral change,
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or sometimes they're associated with growth delay,
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occasionally with epilepsy. But diabetes insipidus,
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it can occur with a hamartoma.
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So that certainly doesn't rule it out,
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but it points a little bit more towards germinoma.
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I'll tell you what else points a lot more towards
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germinoma besides the enhancement hamartomas don't
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enhance is this little funny nubbin of growth
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purely headed towards the third ventricle.
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You don't see that with hamartoma.
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And we know that germinomas like to
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seed the cerebrospinal fluid,
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even though these are more common in males,
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in the male gender, in the pineal region,
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in the suprasellar region,
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some people think a little more common in females.
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Some textbooks say males equal to females,
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but there's no major gender predilection.
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90% of these present before age 20,
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and our patient is 14, so fits that criteria.
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Diabetes insipidus, super common.
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You can check that box off.
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Pan-hypopituitarism because of infiltration of the pituitary,
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which is probably occurring here,
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is another thing to be on your guard for.
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They can present rather acutely with decompensation
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and cortisol due to the lack of ACTH,
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or they can even present with hypothyroidism
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due to a decline in TSH production.
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These things are incredibly radiosensitive.
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They're often curable.
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I know this patient did not get surgery.
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The patient got radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and
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there's a 90% ten-year survival for these.
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Anything else clinical about?
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What about HCG and alpha-fetoprotein in these?
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Right.
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That's part of this workup for suprasellar
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but particularly very similar to a pineal region
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workup, which would be looking at CSF characteristics,
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germ cell lesions and things in the pineal region.
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So it's very common, as you mentioned,
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that the presentation of the suprasellar
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of the pineal region. In males.
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That's the characteristic one with paranoid syndrome.
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Okay. Up gaze, retraction nystagmus.
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You might not have heard about that one.
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Light near dissociation. Okay.
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So you can kind of reacquaint yourself with that one.
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If we're thinking about germinoma, this is kind
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of a relation to the pineal region ones that's
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a good clinical pearl. And of course,
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germinoma associated with HCG elevation more frequent
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in the CSF. Occasionally, it can spill into the blood.
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You get a blood elevation,
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and alpha-fetoprotein points more to embryonal cell
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or teratocarcinoma as opposed to germinoma.
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So this is a germinoma.
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It's proven surgically. It responded extremely well,
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as they usually do to radiotherapy and in this case,
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also chemotherapy.
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There wasn't a lot of seeding present,
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and I'm ready to move on to the next one.
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How about you?
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